San Francisco Giants podcast with Daniel Dullum: Padres Musgrove shuts down Giants striking out 11 batters

San Francisco Giants right fielder Luis Gonzalez cannot catch a double hit by San Diego Padres’ Wil Myers during the sixth inning of at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2022. (AP News photo)

On the Giants podcast with Daniel:

#1 Joe Musgrove San Diego Padres had himself a game striking out 11 batters which is a season high and he kept the Giants batting order off balance.

#2 The Padres Manny Machado had three RBIs and helping defeat the San Francisco Giants 5-4.

#3 Luis Campusano and Jake Cronenworth also had RBIs for the Padres in a game where every run counted.

#4 The loss was the Giants seventh straight in the course of this seven game losing streak how bad has this team needed some good hitting.

#5 The Giants had Thursday off and get set to open up a three game series against the Philadelphia Phillies Friday night. Starting for the Phils Kyle Gibson (9-5, 4.08) for the Giants Alex Cobb (4-6, 3.81) a 7:15 pm PDT at Oracle Park.

Join Daniel for the San Francisco Giants podcast heard Thursdays at www.

Joey Meneses’ three-run walk-off homer in the tenth, wins game for Washington 7-5

Joey Meneses gets quite a greeting at home plate after hitting the game winning 10th inning three run home run against the Oakland A’s at Nationals Park in DC on Thu Aug 31, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Washington Nationals (45-86) beat the A’s 7-5 in ten innings on Thursday to win the series two games to one. In a game that took four hours and two minutes, the Oakland A’s (49-83) scored two runs in the top of the tenth to take a 5-3 advantage. With rookie Norge Ruiz on the mound for Oakland, the Nats scored four runs in their half of the tenth to win in a walk-off.

The A’s had two players in the lineup making their Major League debuts. They were Ken Waldichuk and Cody Thomas. Thomas came to the A’s in a trade for Sheldon Neuse in 2021.
Lefty Ken Waldichuk was acquired from the Yankees in the trade for Frankie Montas. Waldichuk, who played his college ball at St. Mary’s in Moraga, went four and 2/3rds innings.

He allowed five hits and one run, struck out six, and walked four. Waldichuk showed grit as he worked out of jams in the first three innings. The Nats’ centerfielder Lane Thomas doubled on Waldichuk’s first pitch.

Joey Meneses singled to drive in Thomas with the Nats’ first run of the game. Nelson Cruz singled to put men on at first and third with one out. Waldichul retired the next two hitters to end the threat. The Nats’ Alex Call led off the frame in the second inning with a triple. The Nats failed to score as Waldichuk retired the next three hitters, two on strikeouts.

The Nationals threatened to score in the third. They had men on at first and second with one out. Waldichuk struck out Ildemare Vargas for the second out. Cesar Hernandez walked to load the bases. Alex Call was retired on a fly ball to left to end the inning. Washington led 1-0 after three.

The Nats’ hurler, Paolo Spino, kept the A’s off balance with his mix of sliders, curveballs, and a 90-mile fastball. Rookie catcher Shea Langeliers broke the spell in the top of the fifth. Shea led off the fifth with his third home run of the year. The ball just made it over the fence in left.

The game remained tied until the top of the seventh. Cristian Pache, pinch-hitting for Thomas, drew a walk. Nick Allen laid down a successful sacrifice bunt to send Pache to second. With two out, Tony Kemp singled to drive in Pache.

Sean Murphy singled to right. Joey Meneses overran the ball, allowing Kemp to go to third. Seth Brown singled to drive in Kemp. The A’s led 3-1. Washington got a run back in their half of the inning. With one out, Meneses singled. It was his third hit of the game. Luke Voit followed with a single and sent Meneses to third. Nelson Cruz hit into a fielder’s choice to drive in Meneses with the run.

The Nationals tied the game in the eighth. Sam Moll was now pitching for Oakland. Moll hit Cesar Hermnadez with a pitch. The ball appeared to hit Hernandez on the top of his foot. The A’s challenged the call. After a short review, the call on the field was upheld. Hernandez stole second and scored the tying run on a single by Gargas.

Neither team scored in the ninth. In the tenth, the A’s scored two runs to take a 5-3 lead. Sean Murphy was the ghost runner at second base. Hunter Harvey, armed with a 100-mile-an-hour fastball, retired Brown and Stephen Vogt. Vimael Machin walked. Shea Langeliers doubled to drive in both runners to put the A’s ahead 5-3.

A’s manager Mark Kotsay summoned Norge Ruiz from the bullpen to pitch the tenth. Cesar Hernandez was the ghost runner. Ruiz retired Josh Palacios for the first out. Keibert Ruiz singled to drive in Hernandez. The A’s led 5-4 at this point in the game.

Vargas struck out for the second out. Ruiz walked Lane Thomas. The next hitter Joey Meneses, who had three hits earlier in the game, homered to win the game for the Nationals. The Nats win 7-5. It was the Nationals’ first walk-off win of the year.

Game Notes- With the loss, the A’s are 49-83. Oakland has 30 games left to play in 2022. The Nationals improved to 45-86.

The hitting star for Oakland was Shea Langeliers, with a home run and a double. Langeliers drove in three runs. The Nats’ Joey Meneses had three singles and a game-winning three-run home run.
The line score for Washington was seven runs, 11 hits, and one error. The A’s line was five runs, 11 hits, and no errors.

In his first Major League game, Cody Thomas recorded his first hit in the fifth inning.

Oakland set a franchise record, having used 58 different players in 2022. They set an Oakland record using 29 rookies, another Oakland record with 15 rookie pitchers.

The A’s meet the Baltimore Orioles for three games starting Friday night. J.P. Sears (5-1, 2.28) will go for Oakland. The O’s will counter with righty Drew Kremer (6-4, 3.24 ERA) a 4:05 pm PDT.

Oakland A’s podcast with Jerry Feitelberg: Nats Sanchez was a flat out mystery for A’s hitters Wednesday

Washington Nationals starter Anibal Sanchez picked up his first win of the season against the Oakland A’s at Nationals Park in DC on Wed Aug 30, 2022 (AP News photo)

On the A’s podcast with Jerry F:

#1 The Oakland A’s (49-82) were just baffled facing Washington Nationals (44-86) pitcher Anibal Sanchez who three hits, one run in seven innings of work.

#2 Jerry, the A’s just couldn’t figure Sanchez out talk about his mix of pitches where the A’s hitters just couldn’t wrap enough of them to even catch the Nats on the scoreboard.

#3 The loss snapped the A’s three game win streak that Oakland had built up when they were at home taking the last two of a four game series against the New York Yankees and then taking the opening game in Washington on Tuesday night against the Nats 10-6.

#4 For Sanchez it’s his first win of the season and defeating a team that’s just above them for the worst record in baseball.

#5 The A’s and Nats conclude this three game series at Nationals Park in DC Thursday. Starting for the A’s Ken Waldichuk whose making his first start for the A’s he’ll be opposed by Nats starter Paolo Espino (0-6, 4.35 ERA) a 1:05 pm PDT first pitch.

Join Jerry for the A’s podcasts Thursdays at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Tony LaRussa out indefinately as White Sox manager; Sox say LaRussa to see heart specialist

Chicago White Sox manager Tony LaRussa comes out of the dugout during the top of the second inning at Camden Yards in Baltimore against the Baltimore Orioles on Thu Aug 25, 2022 (AP News photo)

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

Chicago White Sox Hall of Fame manager Tony LaRussa is out indefinitely with heart related medical issues. A series of tests are underway at this time. Tony’s Bench coach Miguel Cairo, will continue to fill in for Tony. LaRussa will be seeing a heart specialist in Phoenix according to the White Sox as announced on Wednesday. LaRussa is scheduled to see doctors at the Mayo Clinic.

LaRussa is one of 22 managers in the baseball Hall of Fame. As of today No.2 in total wins in history for a Hall of Fame manager with 2,846 wins, only Connie Mack (Philadelphia A’S) is ahead of Tony. Mack won an incredible 3,731 games. LaRussa’s Chicago White Sox continue to under-perform. Picked to win the AL Central by most ‘going away’.

As of today the White Sox are resting in third place with a record of 63-66, six games behind the division leading Cleveland Guardians and 7 1/2 games behind for a wild card berth in the American League. According to FanGraphs the Chicago White Sox today have a dismal 2.4% odds of advancing as a wild card team.

In 33 years as a manager, Tony La Russa guided his teams to three World Series titles, six league championships, and 13 division titles. Tony and Sparky Anderson are the only two managers in history to have won World Series titles in both leagues, Tony with the A’s and Cardinals, Sparky with Cincinnati and Detroit. Tony’s first World Series title came here in the Bay Area as manager of the Oakland A’s during the 1989 World Series, as the A’s swept the San Francisco Giants in four games, during the Loma Prieta earthquake.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play voice for the Oakland A’s Spanish flagship station Le Grande 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

The Low Point: Coming up short, injuries, Craw’s ejection symbolize the Giants’ squandered season in 5-4 loss to San Diego

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–Well, we now know when the next meaningful Giants-Padres game will be.

April 29 at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú Béisbol in Mexico City. The remaining meetings between the clubs this season will be of diminished importance.

Adios Pelota.

The Giants suffered a third straight one-run loss to the Padres, 5-4 on Wednesday afternoon at a sparsely-populated Oracle Park. And if that weren’t burdensome enough, their season is unofficially done with a seventh straight loss to end August and a fall to fourth place in the NL West.

“Admirable effort, no quit,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “A lot of grind at the end no matter the situation. But the only thing that matters in this league is wins and losses and we weren’t able to get it done.”

That’s kind of the beginning of what’s wrong. The rest?

Have a seat.

Brandon Belt delayed his decision to opt for knee surgery until Thursday. The first baseman got a second opinion on his troublesome knee from Stanford Medicine that recommends surgery. The opinion alone likely ends his season, and starts speculation that his career with the Giants will end at the conclusion of the season. The 34-year old will be a free agent and he plans to speak to his agent regarding his options before deciding on the recommended surgery.

Austin Slater has a dislocated finger suffered in Tuesday’s loss. He couldn’t hit, but was available to pinch run, which he did, scoring a run in the eighth inning. Slater’s been a top performer offensively through the Giants’ last two months of losing, but it’s unlikely he plays much going forward or at all with the team wanting to audition other players in September.

Evan Longoria started Wednesday despite his sore hamstring. Joc Pederson and Brandon Crawford jawed with the umpires, who appeared to contribute to the Giants’ 14 strikeouts with questionable calls. Crawford was ejected after gesturing for calm and turning away from third base umpire Ryan Blakney and his emphatic heave-ho.

“You play below-par baseball for a really long period of time, tempers are going to flare,” Kapler said. “People are going to be pissed off. Stress levels are going to be high. Patience is going to be low.”

Then to conclude their afternoon, the hosts’ rally from a five-run deficit ended with an uneventful ninth inning while facing disposed closer Josh Hader. The former Brewers’ All-Star hasn’t tipped the scales with a 19.06 ERA in eight appearances since his trade. But he mowed down the Giants in the ninth, retiring Tommy La Stella, Luis Gonzalez and Austin Wynns after Thairo Estrada’s leadoff base hit to end it.

“Whether it was with Milwaukee or it was here, at the end of the day, it was something mechanically that I was going through. It was a little bump in the road that, ultimately, is making me into a better player, said Hader, who finally realized an opportunity to positively spin his struggles.

“We’ve got to get him going,” said Padres manager Bob Melvin. “This is a guy that we brought in for a reason.”

Anibal Sanchez’ Strong performance sends the A’s down to defeat 5-1

Washington Nationals starting pitcher Anibal Sanchez delivered a pitch in the third inning against the Oakland Athletics at Nationals Park, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2022, in Washington (AP News photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

Behind a superb performance by the veteran Hurler Anibal Sanchez, the Washington Nationals snapped the Oakland A’s modest three-game winning streak Wednesday night with a 5-1 win at Nationals Park in DC. Sanchez had not won a game since the 2020 season. He was 0-5 before the start of the game, and his ERA was 5.72.

The A’s starter James Kaprielian absorbed the loss. Kap’s record is 3-9. Kaprielian has pitched six innings or fewer in his last 32 starts. Kap seems to run into trouble whenever he faces the opponent’s lineup for the third time.

The A’s grabbed an early 1-0 lead in the top of the second inning. First baseman Dermis Garcia hit a 457-foot blast into the left-field seats with one out. It was Garcia’s second homer run in the last two games and his second home run in his Major League carer. Garcia did not doubt that the ball would leave the yard after he hit the ball. The A’s didn’t know it at the time that they were done putting runs on the board.

Kaprielian had his way with the Nats for the first three innings. He got out of a jam in the fourth. With two out, Nelson Cruiz and Keibert Ruiz singled to put men on at first and third. Kap struck out Lane Thomas for the third out.

Things went south for Kap in the bottom of the fifth. Kap walked the leadoff hitter CJ Abrams. A’s second baseman Jonah Bride misplayed Idelmaro Vargas’ ground ball. The speedy Abrams went to third on the play. Josh Palacios singled to drive in Abrams. Nats’ second baseman Luis Garcia singled to drive in Vargas.

The Nats led 2-1. Kaprielian got the 30-year-old rookie, Joey Meneses, to hit into a 5-4-3 double play. All Kaprielioan had to do to get end the inning was retire Luke Voit. Voit had a tough night in Tuesday’s game. He was hitless in five trips to the plate and struck out three times. Voit was hitless in his first two appearances Wednesday night. Voit ended the drought when he blasted his 17th home run of the year into the right-center-field seats to put the Nats ahead 4-1.

A’s manager Mark Kotsay elected to send Kap out to pitch the sixth. Three of the four runs the Nats scored in the fifth were unearned. Kaprielian retired Ruiz and Thomas for the first two outs. Abrams ended Kap’s night when he doubled. Kotsay brought in lefty Zach Logue to pitch to the switch-hitter, Ildemare Vargas. Vargas doubled to make it a 5-1 game.

As mentioned above, Sanchez went seven innings, allowing three hits and one run. His only mistake was Demis Garcia’s monster home run. Charles Edwards, Jr. and Kurt Finnegan held the A’s scoreless in the eighth and ninth innings to preserve the win for Sanchez and the Nationals.

Game Notes- With the loss, the A’s are 49-82. The Nats are 44-86. Washington entered the game with a woeful home record of 20-47.

The line score for Washington was five runs, nine hits, and one error. The line for Oakland was one run, five hits, and no errors. The A’s loaded the bases with two outs in the ninth but failed to score.

The A’s meet the Nationals Thursday at 1 pm. The A’s will start Lefty Ken Waldichuk, who will make his first Major League start. Waldichuk came to the A’s from the Yankees in the trade for Frankie Montas. Righty Paolo Espino (0-6, 4.35 ERA0 will be on the mound for the Nats.
After the series with the Nationals end, the A’s will head to Baltimore to play three games against the revitalized Orioles.

Giants can’t buy a win drop sixth straight to Pads 4-3 at Oracle Tuesday

San Diego Padres starter Blake Snell pitched six innings giving up no runs and four hits against the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park in San Francisco on Tue Aug 30, 2022 (AP News photo)

San Diego (72-59). 4. 9. 1

San Francisco (61-67). 3. 7. 4

Tuesday, August 30, 2022

By Lewis Rubman

SAN FRANCISCO-Tuesday’s contest between the 71-59 San Diego Padres and the 61-66 San Francisco Giants was a battle between two disappointed and disappointing teams.

No one expected the Giants to duplicate their superb 107 win 2021 season, but no one expected them to be all but out of contention for a playoff with six weeks left to play. If you’ve been following my dispatches, there’s no need for me to make a summary list of the orange and black’s deficiencies and no time or space to attempt an analysis of them.

I will, however, add that Joey Bart, who had re-established himself as the Giants’ catcher of the future, will be out of action for at least a week as a result of the concussion he suffered in last Monday night’s accident prone encounter between the Pads and the Giants that also claimed umpire Marvin Hudson and the Oracle Park lighting system.

The Padres, too, had high hopes. They started 2021 as the main challengers to the Dodgers’ perennial dominance of the NL West. The Giants took care of that delusion. This year, they waited with baited breath for Fernando Tatís, Jr., the hope of the franchise since ’19, to recover from the fractured wrist that had him on the IL since April 7.

They hocked the family jewels to the Nationals at the trade deadline to acquire Juan Soto and Josh Bell and gave up Eric Hosmer, for whom they’d traded four players to acquire the days before, and two prospects to the Red Sox,in order to get left handed pitcher Jay Groome.

That wasn’t all, but you get the picture. This team would be unbeatable with Tatís in the line up. But he pissed away that opportunity along with the performance enhancing drug found in his urine. The Padres now are in a fight to keep their tenuous hold on the third and last wild card spot.

Blake Snell, San Diego’s southpaw starter, came to work with a record of 5-7, 4.24. After the Friars defeated the Franciscans it stood at 6-7, 3.87. Snell did an excellent job in his six inning stint, shutting the Giants out on four hits, three walks, and a hit batter. He struck out eight. 62 of his 105 pitches counted as strikes.

Logan Webb, who, along with Monday night’s losing pitcher Carlos Rodón, has been one of the twin pillars of San Francisco’s rotation, started for the Giants. He began the day at 11-7, 3.33 and ended it at 11-8, 2,89. Webb threw exactly 100 pitches, 72 for strikes, over 6-2/3 frames, yielding only one run, and it was unearned. He allowed four hits and a walk, while fanning seven.

Neither team scored until there were two down in the top of the sixth.

That doesn’t mean that the game was uneventful before then. The first two innings alone provided us with two challenged calls, one for catcher’s interference and other on the second out of what would have been a double play.

The result of both reviews went against the Giants. In that same pair of innings, each pitcher either picked off a runner or caught one stealing, and Austin Slater dislocated his left pinkie sliding into second base. Mike Yastrzemski replaced him as center fielder.

As the game progressed and the zeroes piled up on the scoreboard, the episodic excitement of the opening frames gave way to suspense. San Diego finally broke the ice when Manny Machado beat out a grounder to Crawford, whose throw to first went wild for the shortstop’s second error of the night.

Josh Bell followed with a single to right that drove in Machado and sent Webb to the showers, replaced on the mound by Alex Young. The portsider walked Jake Cronenworth on a full count. Brandon Drury caused a stir with a fly to deep right center on which Yastrzemski made a fine running catch to end the inning.

The Giants threatened a comeback in their half of the frame. With one down, JD Davis slammed a double off the Visa sign in right center, but Snell fanned Estrada and Crawford to put down the brief uprising.

Submariner Tyler Rogers was the Giants’ hurler for the seventh. Ha-Seong Kim led off with a bouncer that Davis fielded at the hot corner, but his throw to first drew Yermín Mercedes off the base.

The error haunted the homeowners because the next batter, Trent Grisham, drove a full count sinker 389 feet into the left field night to put the Pads on top, 3-0. Two of those runs were unearned, the result of bad throws from the left side of the San Francisco infield.

Then the serious trouble started. Jurickson Parofar doubled to left, went to third on a productive ground out to second by Soto, and scored on a two bagger to right by the Manny you love to hate. Out went Rogers, in came Scott Alexander, who struck out Bell on three pitches; he didn’t swing on any of them. But the orange and black now were looking at a four run deficit.

Tim Hill started the seventh for San Diego, pitched to three batters (strike out, walk, force at second), and gave way to Luis García for the final out. García threw a scoreless eighth, allowing only a hard hit single that just eluded Flores’s glove on its way to center field.

Joc Pederson led off his team’s eighth, pinch hitting for Mercedes, he lashed a single to left. After Longoria flew out to center, Davis hit a hard bounder to the mound. García fielded it and threw it into center field, putting runners on the corners.

Estrada hit a soft grounder to short and beat it out for a run producing single that advanced Estrada to second. Crawford, the potential tying run, whiffed for the second out. Wynns left Davis and Estrada stranded, grounding out to short. It now was a 4-1 game.

Dominic Leone tried to keep it that way when he entered the fray to open the ninth. He survived a fright when, with two on and one out, the Manny you love to hate hit a long fly ball that Pederson caught in front of the Toyota ad just to the left of the 354 foot sign in left field.

Nick Martínez, seven for seven in save opportunities converted, made it eight for eight. Wade flew out to left. Yastremski went down swinging. Flores kept the Giant fans’ hopes alive by drawing a full count walk, giving Pederson a chance for an encore.

He came through with a splash hit into McCovey Cove, his fourth and second as a Giant. San Diego challenged the call, claiming the ball left the field in foul territory. The call stood, and it was 4-3. But Longoria fouled out to first to end it all.

The Giants will give it another try tomorrow at 12:45. They’ll send Alex Wood (8-11,5.00) and against Joe Musgrove (8-6, 2.96).

Murphy’s grand slam leads A’s to a 10-6 win over Nationals in DC on Tuesday

Oakland A’s infielder Dermis Garcia raises his hand in appreciation of the success the A’s offense was having against the Washington Nationals on Tue Aug 30, 2022 at Nationals Park in DC (@Athletics photo)

By Jerry Feitelberg

The Oakland A’s(49-81) playing in the fairly new Washington Nationals (43-86) stadium for the first time, beat the Nats 10-6 in a wild and woolly contest. It had been hot and humid in the Nation’s Capitol earlier in the day. However, after a rain shower, the temperature at the start of the game was 73 degrees, and the humidity was 95%.

With humidity numbers in that range, the players on the field will work up quite a sweat, and the players know the ball carries better with high humidity. Would the starting pitchers be able to keep their opponents’ bats quiet? Could Cole Irvin get run support from his mates? The A’s hitters did give Irvin support.

The A’s put ten runs on the board and recorded 13 hits. After a great performance against the Miami Marlins last week in Oakland, Cole Irvin was not sharp. Irvin allowed nine hits and five runs in five and 1/3rd innings.

Irvin did not get a decision in the game against the Marlins. Baseball is a strange game. Irvin gave up five runs and got the win. This game leaves so many fans scratching their heads.

The A’s jumped out to an early 1-0 lead in the top of the first. Playing in left field, Tony Kemp led off the inning with a double. Nats’ starter Erick Fedde struck out Seth Brown for the first out. A’s catcher Sean Murphy singled to center to drive in Kemp with the run.

The lead didn’t last long. Nats’ leadoff hitter Lane Thomas sent Irvin’s second pitch of the game over the fence to tie the game. The next hitter, Joey Meneses, doubled. Meneses tagged and went to third on Luke Voit’s fly ball to right. Nats’ DH Nelson Cruz, who loves to torment the A’s, drove in Meneses with a sacrifice fly. The Nats led 2-1 after one inning of play.

In the bottom of the second, Washington plated two more runs to go ahead 4-1. With one out, Victor Robles singled. Irvin hit CJ Abrams with a pitch to put two men on with one out. Lane Thomas singled to drive in Robles. It was Thomas’ second RBI of the game. Meneses followed with his second double of the night to make it 4-1.

The A’s, in the third, sent nine men to the plate as they put five runs on the board to lead 6-4. With one out and Sean Murphy at second, A’s first baseman Dermis Garcia hit his first Major League home run to make it a 4-3 game.

Fedde retired Vimael Machin for the second out. Three straight singles by Jonah Bride, Cal Stevenson, and Nick Allen plated the A’s fourth run of the game. The Nats brought in Hunter Harvey to pitch to Tony Kemp. Kemp doubled to drive in two more runs. The A’s led 6-4 midway through the third inning.

Washington added a run in the bottom of the fourth to make it a one-run deficit 6-5. With two out, Lane Thomas walked. Joey Meneses doubled for the third time to drive in Thomas.

The A’s put four more on the board in the top of the fifth. With one out, Cal Stevenson walked. Nick Allen struck out. Tony Kemp singled.

It was Kemp’s third hit of the game. Seth Brown walked to load the bases. Sean Murphy, who had two singles in his first two trips to the plate, hit a grand slam to propel the A’s to a 10-5 advantage. For Murphy, it was his first-career grand slam. As the late Dave Niehaus would say:” Grandma, get out the mustard and the Rye bread; it’s a grand salami.”

The Nationals’ Luis Garcia homered off Austin Pruitt in the eighth to make it 10-6. Domingo Acevedo set the Nats down in order 1-2-3 in the ninth to secure the win for Oakland, 10-6.

Game Notes: The A’s won their third straight game. They are now 49-81. They have 32 games left to play this year. The Nationals dropped to 43-86. Washington owns the worst record in all of baseball. The A”s have the second-worst record. 

The A’s line was ten runs, 13 hits, and no errors. Tony Kemp had two doubles and a single. Sean Murphy had two singles and a grand slam. Quite a night for Murphy. A’s rookie, Jonah Bride, had a single and a double.

The hitting star for Washington were Joe Menses and Lane Thomas. Meneses had three doubles in his first three trips to the plate, and Thomas had a home run and a single. Victor Robles had two singles for the Nats. Luis Garcia had a solo home run.

The A’s announced pitchers Dany Jimenez and Zach Jackson are on the ten-day IL. 

The A’s and Nats will meet Wednesday evening again. James Kaprielian (3-8, 4.88) will pitch for Oakland, and Anibal Sanchez (0-5, 5.72) goes for the Nats’. The game will start at 4:05 pm.

The time of the game was 3:24. 26,321 fans were in attendance, but it appeared a lot of fans stayed away due to the possibility of rain.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Chasing No.61 — You Be The Judge

New York Yankees’ Aaron Judge, right, launches his 50th home run of the season as Los Angeles Angels catcher Matt Thaiss, center, and home plate umpire Quinn Wolcott watch in the top of the eighth inning at the Big A in Anaheim on Mon Aug 28, 2022 (AP News photo)

Chasing No.61 — You Be The Judge

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

On October 1, 1961 New York Yankee outfielder Roger Maris hit his home run No.61 of the season breaking the (at that time) major league record for most home runs in one season of 60 established by Babe Ruth in 1927. Today Yankee center fielder Aaron Judge is challenging Roger Maris record as well as making a bid to become the Most Valuable Player in the American League.

Roger Maris still holds the home run record for one season in the American League and another Yankee, Aaron Judge today, 95 years later is on a pace to break that record with his first-place team.

The major league record is that of Barry Bonds of 73 home runs in 2001. However because Bonds played during the much maligned ‘steroids era’, a period of time when a number of players were believed to have used performance-enhancing drugs, resulting in increased offensive numbers, Barry Bonds record is kind of hollow, compared to the historic 61 of Roger Maris.

Bonds was not alone during that era, there are other “regular suspects” like Mark McGwire, Sammy Sosa, José Canseco, Rafael Palmeiro whose records are also considered suspicious and therefore have lessen their impact. As a result these players with Hall of Fame statistics so far have fallen short of induction.

Beginning this Tuesday August 31, the Yankees have 33 games left this season. The Yankee have a very even schedule the rest of the way; 17 games on the road and 16 at Yankee Stadium.

The race for the MVP in the American League will be between two men, NY Yankees Aaron Judge and LA Angels Shohei Ohtani, who won it last year. In 2017 many believe that during his rookie year Aaron Judge was robbed of the MVP as he hit for .284 with 52 home runs and 114 runs batted in.

José Altuve of the Houston Astros won the MVP that season hitting for a .346 average with 24 home runs and 81 runs batted in. By the way that 2017 was also the last of the three batting titles Altuve has won so far.

I believe (and I do not have a vote) the MVP voting will be close this season. I am from the school of thinking that it should go to the player that helps his team win the Division; the Yankees are on the way to do that, while the Angels are finishing in fourth place this season.

The mere fact that Ohtani is a unique two-way player, (the most relevant since Babe Ruth) the Japanese super star, a very good hitter and a very good pitcher is going to seduce many writers to vote for him again. Let’s face it.

The national baseball media has a love affair with the Japanese super star. A relatively new baseball stat WAR, wins against replacement figures big today in the major leagues and applies to these two guys, when it comes to the MVP.

As of today Aaron Judge 50 home runs is on a pace to hit 62 home runs this year and therefore establish the new American League record. Can he do it? You be the Judge!

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the lead play by play announcer on the Oakland A’s Spanish radio network and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsadioservice.com

Lights Out: Giants suffer 5th consecutive loss, 6-5 to the Padres, further damaging their playoff hopes

By Morris Phillips

SAN FRANCISCO–The Giants needed working lights, of course. But at this critical juncture of the season, their wish list is lengthier than a functional ballpark.

An unusual night at Oracle Park unearthed few answers as the Giants suffered a frustrating loss to the Padres, 6-5.

Their fifth straight defeat was again littered with sporadic offense that didn’t take hold until the eighth inning, when they pushed across three runs, and disappeared as quickly as it materialized in the ninth.

Ironically, LaMonte Wade Jr. batted in the ninth, more than four hours after first pitch in a game extended by a pair of in-game delays, and struck out after looking at all three strikes.

So much for “Late Night” and so much for the Giants.

“I thought it was a better offensive performance, but there’s no question the main issue for us is we haven’t been as good in the (hitting) zone,” manager Gabe Kapler said. “I think earlier in the season, we were much better at driving balls in the zone.”

Carlos Rodon left the Giants in an early hole, allowing three runs in the first, capped by Brandon Drury’s two-run shot. Rodon, who was fantastic in his previous start at Detroit, was baffling on Monday. He needed 28 pitches to survive the first inning, and his fastball to Drury–pitch number 24–left the slugger little choice but to deposit it into the bleachers.

Rodon never got untracked, and after a 40-minute delay to fire up the stadium lights preceded by a 10-minute delay when home plate umpire Marvin Hudson twisted his knee trying to track a foul pop, he was left to be philosophical.

“It was odd, right? Poor guy behind home plate tonight, who knows what he did to his knee, but hopefully he’s all right. Then the light thing. It was kind of an odd game today, right? A little different,” Rodon said.

Rodon went just four innings, and departed with the Giants down, 5-0.

The Giants’ comeback that fell a run short started in the fourth with Joc Pederson’s homer that trimmed the deficit to 5-2. In the eighth, Austin Slater knocked in two runs with a base hit, and J.D. Davis followed with an RBI single that scored Thairo Estrada.

Padres’ closer Nick Martinez was summoned to get a four-out save and allowed both run-scoring hits. But he recovered, retiring Austin Wynns to end the eighth, and Tommy La Stella, Wade and Wilmer Flores consecutively in the ninth.

“All of a sudden, the eighth inning feels like the ninth inning and to have to come out and recreate that adrenaline again in the ninth is just another something that really he hasn’t been through,” manager Bob Melvin said of Martinez, who has supplanted the struggling Josh Hader in the San Diego bullpen.

The Giants are 10-14 in August, and a season-worst four games below .500. But here’s what’s even more disheartening: the Padres, one of two teams the Giants need to catch, are 13-13, and would be feeling the heat given all their splashy, in-season additions if the Giants were applying pressure.

On Tuesday, Logan Webb is matched against the Padres’ Blake Snell in the middle-game of the three-game set.